For the second night in a row, Jimmy Kimmel opened his show Wednesday by tearing apart the new Republican health care bill and its co-author, Sen. Bill Cassidy.

The scathing monologue escalated the brewing feud between the late-night host and Cassidy, who appeared on Kimmel's show in May to discuss children's health care access.

In May, the host openedJimmy Kimmel Live! with an emotional speech revealing that his son, Billy, was born with a heart defect. In a speech that quickly went viral, Kimmel then slammed President Donald Trump and Republican lawmakers for attempting to cut health care funding, saying that no parent should have to choose whether to save their child.

Shortly afterwards, Kimmel had Cassidy, a Louisiana Republican, on his show, where the senator proposed that any health care legislation face "the Kimmel Test," — a term he coined — to prove it ensured coverage for children born with medical issues.

Cassidy repeatedly touted the line, saying his own bill was a Republican option that would keep popular Obamacare protections, including coverage for pre-existing conditions, in place.

On Tuesday, Kimmel accused Cassidy of lying to his face about what was in his health care proposal.

Upon reading the the Graham-Cassidy bill, the late-night host said, he was shocked to discover that it did not fulfill any of the promises he and the senator had previously discussed.

"This guy, Bill Cassidy, just lied right to my face," Kimmel said. "There’s a new 'Jimmy Kimmel test' for you. It’s called a lie detector test."

According to Kimmel's assessment, the bill — co-authored by Cassidy and Sen. Lindsey Graham — would raise premiums, bring back discrimination against people with pre-existing conditions, and cause millions of people to lose health care. Republicans hope to vote on the legislation as early as next week.

Accusing Cassidy of pulling the "all comedians are dummies card," Kimmel fired back with a biting rebuttal, listing all the cuts that the bill would make to health care, including protections for people with pre-existing conditions.

"Oh, I get it, I don't understand because I'm a talk show host, right?" Kimmel started. "Then help me out. Which part don't I understand? The part where you cut $243 billion from federal health care assistance?"

"Am I not understanding the part where states would be allowed to let insurance companies price you out of coverage for having pre-existing conditions?" he continued. "Maybe I don't understand the part of your bill which federal funding disappears completely after 2026? Or maybe it was the part where the plans are no longer required to paid for essential health benefits like maternity care or pediatric visits?"

"Or could it be, Senator Cassidy, the problem is that I do understand and you got caught with your G-O-Penis out? Is that possible?"

Kimmel said that he thought Cassidy was "sincere" when he came on his show in May and said "that every American family, regardless of income, should be able to get quality health care."

After airing a clip from Wednesday's Fox and Friends show, in which Kilmeade says Kimmel is "pushing their politics on the rest of the country," the late-night host called out Kilmeade.

"Whenever I see him, he kisses my ass like a little boy," Kimmel said. "He’s been to the show, he follows me on Twitter, he asked me to write a blurb for his book, which I did, he calls my agent looking for projects."

"The only reason he’s not part of the Hollywood elite," Kimmel added, "is because nobody will hire him to be one,"

"And the reason I'm talking about this is because my son had an open heart surgery, has to have two more, and I learned there are kids with no insurance in the same situation," Kimmel said. "I don't get anything out of this, Brian, you phony little creep. Oh, I'll pound you when I see you."

"I'm not serious?" Kimmel asked. "I never got my head stuck in a bucket of fried chicken."

He said he also got a scolding from Graham for not calling Cassidy and warning him about his Tuesday segment, but that he would refrain from attacking the South Carolina Republican because he resembled Kimmel's late grandmother Jane. "So I have a soft spot for him. I love you, grandma Lindsay, I don't care what you say," Kimmel said.

"If you live in one of these states, call them. It really does make a difference," Kimmel said. "And who knows, maybe you'll meet somebody over the phone and fall in love, you don't know what's going to happen, all right?"